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OverviewSixty-two percent. The percentage of trafficking survivors who have been arrested by the institutions designed to rescue them. Eighty percent said the arrests occurred while they were being trafficked. Ninety percent attributed their criminal records to their trafficking. Then the other side: a 96% federal conviction rate. Average sentence: 147 months. Ten defendants received life imprisonment. The system works-when it targets traffickers. The System investigates every major institution in the anti-trafficking response chain and follows each institution's own records to a single question: why does every link in the chain fail at documented, structural levels? Law enforcement arrests victims instead of identifying them. Thirty-two states score 60 or lower on anti-trafficking protections-a national average of F. Federal prosecutors charge two-thirds of trafficking cases under statutes that decline to name the crime. Hotels settle lawsuits for $24 million, $40 million, $44 million-while employees testify they knew about the trafficking for years. Financial institutions file 7,200 suspicious activity reports per year against an industry valued at $150 billion globally. A visa program designed for trafficking victims has never reached its statutory cap. And then portions of the machinery itself began to disappear-OCDETF eliminated, $850 million cut from DOJ grantmaking, immigration protections functionally gutted. Six institutions. Eight chapters. Twenty-six years of documented failure. Each institution publishes its own performance data. Each institution's data documents its own failure. This investigation followed those records through every link in the chain. Every claim sourced to the institutions' own records-federal reports, court filings, evaluation findings, budget analyses, and the published data the system itself maintains. Failures documented across all administrations without partisan framing. No conspiracy theories. No advocacy. No solutions proposed. The documentary record exists. It is published. The reader assesses. The Sex Trafficking Files is a six-book investigative nonfiction series examining the institutional machinery that fails trafficking victims at every documented level. Each book investigates a different dimension: the data infrastructure, the digital platforms, the child welfare pipeline, the institutional response chain, the survivor experience, and the global trafficking networks. Each book stands alone. Each is built on the institutions' own records. Where the data is clear, the investigation says so. Where it is contested, both sides are presented. Where it is absent, the gap is noted. No conspiracy theories. No partisan framing. The documents are the story. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Erratic Publishing , James D SuttonPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Volume: 4 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.363kg ISBN: 9798257982088Pages: 268 Publication Date: 19 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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